Hamamatsu |
My first trip in September was an
overnight work trip to Hamamatsu, during which I learned all about eels and
gerbera daisies. For some reason, people haven’t figured out how to breed eels
in captivity to any great extent, so baby eels have to be caught out in the
ocean and then raised. For various reasons, the eel population has been
declining, so it’s a big issue of concern. Is it necessary to say that I was
much more interested in the pretty gerbera daisies than the squirmy eels?
That was followed
by a brief but fun trip back to the States, including my first trip to historical
Williamsburg and Jamestown. We went on the archeological tour at Jamestown.
It’s fascinating all of the things they have just started discovering in the
last 20 years and are still discovering now! Also fun was taking advantage of the opportunity to get some shopping done in a place where it is accepted that not everybody has a long torso.
I was back in the
office for a day and a half when I got furloughed due to the government
shutdown. I wouldn’t normally say anything, but since I’m not currently getting
paid by the federal government, I’ll just note that: a) I’m pretty much
irritated with everybody involved in this mess, b) this shutdown is costing us
millions of dollars in fees/penalties for delayed payments, and c) I thought
this Washington Post editorial was pretty good.
So while I’ve been
furloughed, I’ve made it a point to do something every day that gets me out of
the apartment. My furlough adventures have included some lunches and shopping
excursions with friends (to Akasaka, Azabu-juban, and a neighborhood whose name I can’t remember), a trip to the commissary at Yokota (so much more sane when it's not Saturday!), daytime karaoke (it’s really cheap during a weekday!), two days
as an excepted employee (when we learned that we could rotate the excepted
employee status of the Head of Post among the Americans) and a daytrip to
Yokohama.
Yokohama, which is
only about an hour out of Tokyo, has been on my list of places to see for a
long time. Yokohama is the second largest city in Japan and was one of the
first ports to be opened when Japan reopened to foreign trade in 1859. I need
to go back some time to see the garden and the waterfront. On this trip, I went
to Motomachi, which is a cute little shopping area.
But the primary
purpose of the trip was to see Chinatown and eat some yummy Chinese food.
Yokohama’s Chinatown is the largest in Japan and one of the largest in the
world. There are nine gates in and around Chinatown, plus the temple Kanteibyo.
In addition, what
really stood out to me were the huge number of pandas and restaurants. There
were pandas and restaurants everywhere!
Tomorrow's furlough adventure will be going to the 100-yen store in Harajuku. Wednesday is my day in the rotation to be in the office. And then we'll see. At least I've got a lot of options to choose from!